Coffeehouse Thread

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Microsoft UK does
University placements. According to the site they receive 1,000 applications per year, and optimistically assuming there are 20 places that is a 1 in 50 chance of any particular person getting a position.

Frankly my academic record is poor; both University and college aren't great. At best you could describe my grades as lower-central. However I do have some interesting outside projects under my belt and am enthusiastic about Microsoft...

Do you guys consider it even worth applying? Not because I would fall over on the telephone interview or on the face-to-face interview but because my application will be filtered out just on the basis of grades.

Another question; with my poor grades and such is it even worth while me applying for a placement at all for next year? The few positions I've seen are looking for top 10% candidates.

At least after I finish the degree the stuff before University won't trail behind me as much (Who cares what maths grade you got when you have a degree in Computer Science?).

I'm really not trying to be self-defeating, just realistic. If I was looking at my application I too would scoff and throw it in the trash.

What have you got to lose? It sounds like you're not expecting to get a placement anyway so why not apply anyway and remember ALL experience is good experience - even if it's that of a failed application.

Really, it sounds like a win-win situation whatever happens. It's if you're betting everything on getting a placement that it becomes a win-lose situation.

You WILL need to come across as passionate and enthusiastic though, even if you're a "glass half empty" person (which, as a "glass half empty" person myself, I regard as an advantage in many situations in the real world where far too many projects are a disaster
because of an unbelievable amount of hype and over-optimism).

I always attribute getting my placement at microsoft last year to my application form oozing passion. Whatever position one holds in Microsoft, passion and commitment to never give up are common attributes.

If you want some advice, mention your admiration and aspiration for people like Box, Purdy and Anderson but most of all these days placements are occupied by people going beyond the call of duty at uni; societies, extra work expirence no mater how small just
giving the overall image of again passion. After all what is it? Microsoft's Passion 'our' potential...

The very fact that you are on channel nine is a BIG start ahead of most applicants trust me and that will get you past at least the first round.

I always attribute getting my placement at microsoft last year to my application form oozing passion. Whatever position one holds in Microsoft, passion and commitment to never give up are common attributes.

theres never halm in applying for a roll. If you never apply for something that you dont think you will be good at then you will never be challenged, as you would if you got that position.

I applied for the summer internship in the states for microsoft (open to microsoft student partners and interns) not expecting my cv to be looked at but I still go through to the final round of interviews. As a result I learnt alot even though I wasnt selected.

You have nothing to lose if you apply for a job, but lots to potentially lose if you don't. Thats my way of thinking

Heh, come to think of it last September I was sitting in UK reception as a bunch of placements were coming in. 90% of them were in suits. And trying to out geek each other, boasting about what they did on Linux or what coding skills they had.

Heh, come to think of it last September I was sitting in UK reception as a bunch of placements were coming in. 90% of them were in suits. And trying to out geek each other, boasting about what they did on Linux or what coding skills they had.

blowdart wrote:Heh, come to think of it last September I was sitting in UK reception as a bunch of placements were coming in. 90% of them were in suits. And trying to out geek each other, boasting about what they did on Linux or what
coding skills they had.

I was sitting there. Sniggering.

What should they have been doing blowdart?

Ahhh - the memories of the heydays of the dotcom boom - and Blowdart's first interview

Apply. For my Uni placement I ended up at the Royal & Sun Alliance on there graduate training programme for a year. 40 people did the initial tests at my uni alone. I dont know how many unis they went round. 2 of us got interviews. I then got on to the
2 day recruitment event they ran at there own hotel in the wilds of the wirral, along with graduate programme candidates. I got on - the only placement student that year - so it can work!

In the end they offered me a chance to go back when I finished uni but I decided on other challenges and against living in Liverpool. Often wondered what would have happened if I had gone back!

Apply. For my Uni placement I ended up at the Royal & Sun Alliance on there graduate training programme for a year. 40 people did the initial tests at my uni alone. I dont know how many unis they went round. 2 of us got interviews. I then got on to the
2 day recruitment event they ran at there own hotel in the wilds of the wirral, along with graduate programme candidates. I got on - the only placement student that year - so it can work!

In the end they offered me a chance to go back when I finished uni but I decided on other challenges and against living in Liverpool. Often wondered what would have happened if I had gone back!

Manip - do it! As a Microsoft employee, I did not have the 4.0 out of 4.0 grade average at University or a ton of computer experience before getting into the business; but I did have passion which Microsoft really appreciates. If you want something,
always go for it. The only time that you don't want to do it is if you are just spamming interviews just to get in the door (typically this is a bad thing since the person doesn't want the job you are interviewing them for, but they just want to get the foot
in to get into something else).

When I interview folks, I usually value passion (tempered with reality) over a grade point average.